Pembient's proposal entered public conversation in 2015 with a question that the press, mostly, never asked. The question was not whether synthetic horn would work, or whether the science was sound, or whether the economics held up. The question was whether the people who had been running the conservation response so far were the right people to evaluate it.
The framing was set early, and it held. When journalists wrote about Pembient, they called the same handful of organizations: TRAFFIC, WWF, Save the Rhino, Save Vietnam's Wildlife, and the Humane Society. The quotes came back hostile, and they came back fast. The hostility was reported as expert skepticism. The institutional context, that these organizations were defending the strategies on which their own funding depended, that many of them were structurally linked to one another, that none of them had economists or market analysts on staff to evaluate a proposal grounded in market economics, was almost never reported.
This thread collects the pieces that documented the public debate as it unfolded. Read in sequence, they are not a history of synthetic biology. They are a record of how a media frame gets built. The frame placed the burden of proof on the newcomer and gave the institutional response the benefit of the doubt almost blindly. Over the next decade, peer-reviewed research would dismantle the assumptions on which the institutional response was based. By the time that research arrived, the frame was already set in stone. The film's claim is that this is how systems protect themselves: not by winning the argument on the merits, but by controlling who gets to make it.



